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Setting the state for Kant --Are there any acts that are wrong, regardless of the consequences? (Are consequences all that matter?) --Case: Bombing Hiroshima.

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Presentation on theme: "Setting the state for Kant --Are there any acts that are wrong, regardless of the consequences? (Are consequences all that matter?) --Case: Bombing Hiroshima."— Presentation transcript:

1 Setting the state for Kant --Are there any acts that are wrong, regardless of the consequences? (Are consequences all that matter?) --Case: Bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki --intentionally killing innocent people (murder).

2 Kant’s Moral Theory The central concept of morality: Obligation What is the nature of a moral imperative? –Universal –Categorical

3 Formula of Universal Law “Act only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become universal law.” (128) Application in a particular case --determine your maxim --formulate the maxim as a universal law --determine whether you could will that law

4 The lying promise Maxim: Universal law: Can I will it?

5 Formula of Humanity as an End “Act so that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or in that of another, always as an end and never as a means only” (137). Two kinds of value: price, dignity –Rational agents have unconditional value: dignity. This commands respect. The case of the lying promise.

6 Problems for Kant’s Theory Is it always morally wrong to lie? Cases of conflicting obligations? –“Do not lie” –“Do not facilitate murder” Non-human Animals?

7 Kant’s insight Moral imperatives are universal Human beings deserve moral respect


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